H.I.H Michel I of Nowheristan in The Daily Star

March 31, 2009

BEIRUT: Utopia Now in Starco is shaping up to be a place where the trendy 20-somethings of Beirut would want to flock. The restaurant is being readied for its scheduled opening by the end of next week, and the basics are already in place. The walls are covered with stenciled quotes by Oscar Wilde and the like, and along the floor are framed pictures that will soon be hung up on the walls. Most are of singers or bands, but there are a few of Michel Elefteriades. “Because I like myself,” he explains unabashedly, a self-professed megalomaniac.

Elefteriades concedes the fare at Utopia Now will be fairly humble: no smoked salmon or caviar. Patrons will have to content themselves with simpler menu items like labneh and hummos.

Elefteriades was recently asked whether Music Hall would be free too, to which he responded, with his trademark dry humor: “No no, that is very expensive, and they will make you wait at the door and all that.”

Utopia Now is a two-storey restaurant, and the upper floor has a room that is being transformed into a “torture chamber.” At the center is an electric chair and “blood” is painted onto the tiles. When it’s complete, the room will be sealed permanently, viewable to patrons only from a couple of brick-sized windows built into the exterior wall.

The room is a form of catharsis, says Elefteriades, who was tortured when he was 15. When he acquired the Utopia Now location, the room was untouched since the days of the Civil War and the blue tiles reminded him of the ones in the room where he was held. Back then he was a communist, he says, and the “Christian militias” of the day arrested him while he was distributing photocopies of Karl Marx’s manifesto during the war and tortured him.

The experience was the catalyst for Elefteriades’ venture into politics. “This is how I started … being more and more involved in politics to take my revenge on the militias. I joined the army of Michel Aoun when I was 17,” he says. “Being tortured at the age of 15 is not something very easy to swallow for a proud young man, when you are beaten for two days, two consecutive days, and tortured it’s not something that you can forget.”

He says he stayed with Aoun until the former general’s military defeat in 1990 and flight to France the following year.

Elefteriades returned to lead the anti-Syrian, clandestine Unified Movements of Resistance from 1991-94, but after two assassination attempts, he fled to France again and then Cuba.

“I stayed in Cuba for over a year, and this is when I understood that maybe what I was doing wasn’t the right way. I’m not going to spend my life working for the Cuban revolution, or being sent to Angola or elsewhere. Then I realized that I had to do something else, that this is not the way to do it, that this would lead nowhere,” he says.

During this time period, Elefteriades’ thoughts began to crystallize into what would become the idea of Nowheristan – his manifesto on how the world should work.

“The concept springs from the unorthodox belief that many of our sacred and established truths are in fact falsehoods that we have imposed on ourselves: borders, identities, nationalisms, economic divisions, and so forth,” reads the manifesto.

Elefteriades essentially imagines a world where the playing field is leveled, and mankind is treated as a unified, albeit extremely pluralistic, society free of national borders and competing national interests, and where global resources are equally divided among the population.

His ideal society would be run by a “Senate of Elders,” composed of 1,200 brilliant figures from professional fields, all over the age of 60, and divided into two chambers and located in different parts of the world. The senators would vote and debate in private, the media would have no access, and in order for a decision to be adopted, it would have to be accepted by both Senate of Elder chambers, after they have debated the issue separately.

“It ends up by having the Nowheristan ideology implemented everywhere, by dissolving the armies, by dissolving the frontiers, by having one unified GDP for the entire planet, by not having politicians’ elections, but by having the Senate of Elders taking all the important decisions then people everywhere will have the same rights,” Elefteriades explains.

It’s a Utopian idea, he concedes, but one that he is serious about; the second floor of Utopia Now also houses the “Headquarters of Nowheristan” next to the torture chamber.

Besides, he thinks implementing his idea isn’t that unrealistic, given world history. Elefteriades points out that both Christianity and Islam developed behind singular figures that didn’t have television, radio or Internet. Today, around 2,000 and 1,400 years later respectively, both have billions of followers.

“I think that what I’m asking for is not very utopian, compared to other things that have existed,” he says.

Via the Nowheristan website he has already recruited more than 56,000 “naturalized Nowheristanis.” The plan is that once there are enough citizens across the world, they will be called on to perform nonviolent acts of civil disobedience that will topple governments. Once the Nowheristani ideology has taken hold globally, its formal name will change to Everywheristan.

“So, at the moment I registered Nowheristan [the website] I registered all the Everywheristans, dot com, dot net, you name it,” he says, illustrating his practical side.

But before Elefteriades could go public with his ideas on global reform, he knew he had to become successful. To avoid being perceived as someone criticizing the system because he had nothing to lose, based on feelings of resentment, he opted to succeed within the system. So he proceeded to dedicate himself to building a financial empire.

Elefteriades dabbled in music back in Cuba, producing a Cuban-Arabic fusion CD that was so successful it led to the creation of Elefteriades Records, a Warner music label.

He invested in real estate in places others found dubious, such as in Serbia while the country was being bombed by NATO. Five years ago he went with his gut and opened Music Hall, after the club concept failed a contracted feasibility study. It has now sold franchises in Qatar, Dubai, Belgrade, Istanbul and Egypt, with a venue in Sao Paolo under consideration.

If he were just smart and loud with good ideas, no one would listen to him, he says. But, with a smile, he notes he’s all of those, but also rich and successful.


“Alternative visions”, a conference by H.I.H Michel I of Nowheristan at NDU

March 2, 2009

H.I.H Michel I of Nowheristan to speak at Notre-Dame University on the 4th of March 2009

We live in a world where many established facts are aberrations and where margins of liberty and maneuver are constantly diminishing, leaving the people no other choice but to accept the sad status-quo they live in.
Although in this deviant reality, little space is still left for innovative problem solvers, some of them still dare to speak out, believe in their projects and pave the way for change.
H.I.H Michel I of Nowheristan will speak out on the 4th of March 2009, at NDU University against most of these political, social and economic established facts. Don’t miss it!

More details about the conference:

March 4th 2009, 12.00-13.30
Notre-Dame University, Friends Hall
Zouk Mikayel
00961- 9- 640893
nowheristan@yahoo.com

And check out the event created on Facebook on the following address:

http://www.facebook.com/home.php?#/event.php?eid=55279345689&ref=mf

Hope to see you all there!!!!


Nowheristan in five simple questions

January 27, 2009

What is Nowheristan?
It is the solution to all economic, political, social and philosophical problems humanity has been facing since the concept of civilization emerged.

Where is Nowheristan?
Everywhere. Nowheristan is the first step towards Everywheristan.

Why is Nowheristan a necessity?
For establishing a Nation where races and identities are considered as a source of enlightenment rather than coercive threats, is our only chance to know peace.

Who will make from Nowheristan a reality?
The Nowheristanis; no matter where they live, what the color of their skin is and what believes they have.

When will Nowheristan become real?
Soon. Peoples of the world will soon lead the Global Revolution and pave the way for the establishment of a world government.


Nowheristan on the UN Forum

January 22, 2009

NOWHERISTAN!

15 October 2006

http://www.unforum.com/UNheadlines348.htm

Take your cue from “Emperor Michel.” He longs for old Golden Beirut, Rosy Alexandria of Laurence Durell’s quartet, Istanbul’s Constantinople days, Athens of the Olive branch, Yugoslavia’s Belgrade — to mention a few — cities of fantasy, sunshine, love and music.

Actually, he is Michel Elefteriades, a Lebanese of Greek descent, whose family fled Constantinople in the 1920s. He grew up everywhere — with a joyous mix of people more keen on life than destruction. “being from nowhere made me at home everywhere,” Kyriou Elefteriades explains to Beirut Daily Star. Now that he manages a thriving business, the Emperor has 250 employees who address him as “Altesse” (your Highness); he reviews his troops regularly exchanging some sort of special military salute. He wields a designer’s cane, clips his hair in a pony tail, and wears baggy black silk pants.

No, he is not a megalomaniac, nor eccentric. He was a militant during war years and toted a gun to fight in the streets of Beirut. Now, he is for cultural joy. The more intercultural the better. He married a Russian gymnastic champion and performs with groups of Greek, Turk, Bulgarian, Yugoslav, Indian, Cuban, Spanish and Gypsy artists, not to be confused with Bohemians. He had approached the U.N. Secretary General’s Special Representative in Lebanon to explore how he could initiate membership of his state of “Nowherestan.” Mr. Pedersen, he reported, was very forthcoming, but did not promise anything. He was encouraged, however, because one of those present took notes. Now he plans to issue passports.


HIH Michel I of Nowheristan in El Mundo

January 22, 2009

Michel I de ‘Ninguna parte’, la solución para el Líbano

http://www.elmundo.es/elmundo/2007/11/23/orienteproximo/1195814603.html

JAVIER ESPINOSA desde Beirut
ImprimirEnviar noticiaDisminuye letraAumenta letra

23 de noviembre.- Resulta difícil definir la figura de Michel Elefteriades. Él mismo se retrató en una ocasión: “soy un payaso, un filósofo, un luchador y un artista”.

El singular personaje se viste con pantalones bombachos, porta una fusta y una gran argolla en la oreja. La conversación se desarrolla en su despacho de Kaslik -al norte de Beirut-, rodeado de retratos de los incontables artistas con los que ha colaborado (Demis Roussos, Boney M, Gibson Brothers).

Pero también de quien ejerce como su referente ideológico: Che Guevara. Michel descubrió el comunismo en la biblioteca del colegio religioso al que asistía. Leyó ‘El Capital’ y se ratificó como ateo. En plena guerra civil y en medio de un entorno cristiano –su familia es descendiente de un santo de la iglesia greco-ortodoxa-, sus convicciones le llevaron a ser detenido por la milicia de las Fuerzas Libanesas (FL). “Fue un interrogatorio duró”, recuerda.

De la disensión con las FL pasó a la confrontación abierta cuando se enroló como voluntario en las tropas del general Michel Aoun, también cristiano pero enemigo acérrimo de esa facción. “Estaba harto de ser un ratón escondido en los refugios. Quería ser un león y lo conseguí incluso si la guerra era absurda. Fui un buen soldado”, explica.

Como combatiente se mantuvo al lado de Aoun hasta la última batalla de este militar, que fue expulsado de la presidencia del país el 13 de octubre de 1990. Michel tuvo que exiliarse en Francia aunque por poco tiempo. Regresó al Líbano en 1991 y fundó lo que llamó Movimiento Unido de la Resistencia “para luchar contra la ocupación siria e israelí”.

“Me intentaron asesinar dos veces. En la primera volaron mi coche (el relato se acompaña con la exhibición de fotos de un vehículo calcinado). Después intentaron matarme a tiros. Era cuestión de días que me asesinaran así que volví a escapar”, afirma.

Su periplo comenzó por Francia para terminar en Cuba, donde descubrió las grandes “fallas” que presenta la aplicación del comunismo. “Mi respuesta es ser ecléctico. Adoptar lo que tiene de bueno cada ideología: un 20 % de comunismo, un 15 % de anarquismo, un 10 % de socialismo. Incluso un 1 % del nacional-socialismo, su pasión por la grandeza.

El pueblo adora la grandeza pero hay que canalizar esa idea de manera positiva. Por ejemplo, no hay nada más grandioso y por tanto fascista que los conciertos de rock, pero esta gente en vez de lanzarse a la conquista de Polonia pues te cantan: “I will fuck my girlfriend” (me follaré a mi novia) y “listo”, dice.

Con su amalgama ideológica, Michel regresó definitivamente al Líbano en 1995 decidido a demostrar primero que podía ser un capitalista exitoso “para así poder criticar al sistema con cierta autoridad”. Nadie le puede negar la aureola que ha conseguido. No sólo es uno de los productores más notables de la música fusión de Oriente Próximo –se ha especializado en mezclar ritmos latinos y flamenco, con cantantes árabes-, sino que ejerce como uno de los principales animadores artísticos del Líbano. Su popularidad se extendió a toda la región tras su incorporación como jurado al concurso musical televisivo ‘Factor X’.

Sin embargo, sus veleidades creativas no le han apartado de la “militancia política”. De hecho ahora se presenta como la última oportunidad para salvar al Líbano de las disensiones sectarias que amenazan a esta nación. Su solución se llama ‘Nowheristan’ (Ninguna Parte), el “imperio” imaginario que fundó hace cuatro años.

“En el Líbano se están invirtiendo millones de dólares para promover el sectarismo y proteger así al único proyecto racista de la región, Israel. ‘Ninguna Parte’ es un imperio que da la posibilidad de que cada ciudadano sea y crea en lo que le dé la gana. Sólo tiene que firmar a través de internet y les daremos un ‘kit’ (maletín) personal para que se declare independiente en su propio apartamento. Podrían tener bandera personal, y su comida y traje tradicional”, apunta.

Con los 50.000 “ciudadanos” que dice tiene ya ‘Ninguna Parte’, una nación virtual que incluso ha llegado ya a acuñar moneda, Michel I reactivó en octubre su ofensiva en el Líbano lanzando una campaña de desobediencia civil en la que instó a no pagar impuestos. “Cuando caiga el Gobierno lo reemplazaremos por ‘nowheristanis’”, concluye.

El Mundo (Spanish for “The World”) is the second largest daily newspaper in Spain and one of the newspapers of record in this country, with a circulation topping 330,000. It first appeared on October 23, 1989 and has maintained a self-defined liberal editorial line.


HIH Michel I of Nowheristan in the Los Angeles Times

January 22, 2009

Virtual state’s utopia clicks with young

http://articles.latimes.com/2008/jan/01/world/fg-nowheristan1

His hand adorned with silver rings, the self-proclaimed emperor of Nowheristan struck his slim iron cane firmly on the table, quieting a group of twentysomething Lebanese gathered around him.

“All great projects in history started this way,” he said, casting a piercing look at his audience while toying with his cane. “Any new, extravagant idea is always considered at first a hallucination.”

Half showman and half intellectual, Michel Elefteriades, 37, was describing his imaginary land of Nowheristan, where boundaries cease to exist and individual identities become scrambled.

“Nowheristan is not a sect,” he said. “I am not some sort of a guru or prophet.”

Over the last two years, Elefteriades, a poet, composer, painter and leftist activist of mixed Greek and Lebanese descent, has attracted more than 50,000 “citizens of Nowheristan” over the Internet.

He also has produced a record album bearing the name of his utopia and conducted a dozen workshops in Europe and the Middle East to convince young audiences that an all-embracing just and warless nation is conceivable.

According to Elefteriades’ vision, decisions affecting the world should be made by hundreds of elites living in special villages. Politicians would be stripped of their powers everywhere.

Wealth would be redistributed, with Europeans able to enjoy revenue generated by Persian Gulf oil while Africans could benefit from the West’s technological advancement.

One of the region’s most acclaimed alternative music producers, he has plunked down $300,000 of his own money to finance Nowheristan, which even has a flag: a blue circle representing Earth, surrounded by a golden halo symbolizing affluence, on a black background that denotes his movement’s anarchistic roots.

An international group of 25 musicians forms “a national orchestra of Nowheristan,” playing fusions of Arab, Gypsy and a dozen other musical influences.

If he’s a crackpot, he’s keeping some high-powered company. He launched Nowheristan in 2005 in Beirut’s UNESCO Palace at a ceremony attended by Lebanese Culture Minister Tarek Mitri and Geir Pedersen, the United Nations secretary-general’s representative to Lebanon.

Elefteriades says he is scheduled to meet in spring with controversial Latin American leaders, including Hugo Chavez of Venezuela and Rafael Correa of Ecuador.

“People everywhere are fed up with the way the world is today,” said Elefteriades, who on this evening wore billowy pants and a silk vest embroidered with 18th century French motifs. “But change is possible.”

For his efforts, he’s also brought on quite a bit of trouble. Last year, he launched a campaign in Lebanon urging people to stop paying taxes to the “corrupt” government, outraging a group of bankers and officials who threatened to ruin his business, he said.

His obsession with Nowheristan has also affected his personal life, almost destroying his marriage.

Undaunted, he says he is determined to spread the word about his utopian nation through mobilization on the Internet and seminars.

“The time will come to go into action,” Elefteriades said. “The march towards Nowheristan, like Gandhi’s movement, is going to be peaceful.”

In the cafeteria of his Beirut nightclub, several dozen Nowheristanis and other curious visitors listened to him as he alternated between light anecdotes and quotes from Gandhi, Albert Einstein and Karl Marx.

“The reason for this general malaise is the predominance of identities: racial, ethnic, religious, political,” he said. “In Nowheristan, people share a common identity.”

Elefteriades says his turbulent youth in a war-torn country with a dizzying array of religious groups as well as his many voyages around the world showed him that all cultures and civilizations share a common essence.

Growing up during Lebanon’s 1975-90 civil war, he rebelled against his parents’ conservative Christian environment. As a teenager who idolized Che Guevara, he was stopped by Christian militias while distributing communist tracts. Later, he briefly joined the army and fought against the Syrians before escaping when Damascus’ troops took over.

He first fled to Paris in 1990 but returned here a year later. Angered by the political reality in postwar Lebanon, he formed a clandestine armed group to “fight against sectarian parties and foreign interference in the country,” he said. The group, which he called the United Movements of Resistance, carried out acts of sabotage against politicians and organized strikes in universities across the country.

In 1993, he escaped an assassination attempt when a bomb placed under his car exploded while he was nearby. Fearing for his life and those close to him, Elefteriades fled to Paris, then decided to settle in Cuba. Disappointed by what he found there, he returned to Lebanon in 1997.

Since then, his music business has prospered – he owns two recording studios, a music production house and downtown Beirut’s thriving Music Hall. He is working on opening branches of the Music Hall in other cities in the Middle East and Europe.

And, though he put a lid on his former gun-slinging ways, he retained a penchant for political activism.

Four years ago, he came up with the idea for his imaginary nation.

“Nowheristan is my priority today,” said Elefteriades, who is channeling cash from record sales into the movement.

“Revolutions are usually funded by drug-dealing money. I am financing mine from music.”

Los Angeles Times
The Los Angeles Times (also known as the LA Times) is a daily newspaper published in Los Angeles, California. It is the second-largest metropolitan newspaper in the United States and the fourth-most widely distributed newspaper. Its daily circulation reported in October 2008 was 739,000. Founded in 1881, the Times won 38 Pulitzer Prizes through 2007 and five prizes in 2004, which is the third-most by any paper in one year.


Nowheristan in Hurriyet

January 22, 2009

Nowheristan imparatoruyum karım hariç herkes bana majesteleri, der

http://www.hurriyet.com.tr/pazar/5811801.asp?gid=59

Yunan kökenli Lübnanlı Michel Elefteriades, Arap dünyasının en önemli müzik prodüktörlerinden. Aynı zamanda Beyrut’un en büyük gece kulübü Music Hall’un sahibi. 36 yaşında.

1991-94 arasında Lübnan iç savaşında Birleşik Direnişçiler Hareketi’nin lideriydi. “Majesteleri” Elefteriades ütopik ve sanal ülke Nowheristan’ın (Hiçbiryeristan) imparatoru. Kulağa şaka gibi geliyor ama o bu konuda çok ciddi. Hatta, üye olmak amacıyla Birleşmiş Milletler’e başvurduklarını, gereken kriterlere uyduklarını söylüyor. Hiçbir kültüre ve millete ait hissetmeyen, dünyayı değiştirmek isteyen kişilerin ülkesi olacak Nowheristan. Şimdiden 28 binden fazla vatandaşı var. Yakında bu vatandaşların pasaportları da olacak. Prodüktörlüğünü yaptığı gruplardan Chechade Brothers’ın 24 Ocak Çarşamba Babylon’daki konseri için İstanbul’a gelecek Elefteriades’le Beyrut gece hayatını, Hizbullah’ı ve ülkesi Nowheristan’ı konuştuk.

Nerelisiniz, Fransız, Yunan, Lübnanlı?

- Dedemin amcası İzmirli’ymiş. 1922’de Türkiye’den göçmüşler ve Lübnan’a yerleşmişler. O günden beri Lübnanlıyız. Hem Yunan hem de Lübnan pasaportum var. Fransızca düşünüyor ve yazıyorum. Annem ve babam Fransa’da eğitim görmüş, aralarında Fransızca konuşurlar. Beni de bir Fransız okuluna yazdırmışlardı.

Nowheristan nasıl bir ülke?

- Hayali bir ülke. Hem hiçbir yer hem de her yer. Nowheristan’da doğdunuz ülkeyi, kökenlerinizi, kültürünüzü unutup sadece siz oluyorsunuz. Hiçbir yere bağlı değilsiniz, atalarınızın yaşayışından, onların kavgalarından ve ilişki ağlarından sıyrılıyorsunuz. Örneğin bir Ermeni ya da Türk yıllar önce yaşanmış bir olayın yükünü üstlenmek zorunda değil. Bir Ermeni, büyükannesi Türklerle problem yaşadığı için Türkleri sevmemek zorunda mı? Bunu reddeder ve Nowheristanlı olur. Nereden geldiğinizin, kim olduğunuzun, alışkanlıklarınızın hiçbir önemi yoktur Nowheristan’da. Bu ütopik ülkeyi 2003’Te kurdum.

Birleşmiş Milletler’in Nowheristan’dan haberi var mı?

- Evet, ülke kimliğiyle BM’ye başvurduk. BM’ye göre toprağınız olmadan da ülke olabiliyorsunuz. Belli kriterlere uymanız gerekiyor ve çeşitli evrakları dolduruyorsunuz. Bütün bu evrelerden geçtik ve bir ülke olmak için gereken bütün kriterlere uyuyoruz.

Toprağı yok ama vatandaşları var mı bu ülkenin?

- Toprağımız bütün dünya. Şu anda 28 bin 300 bin kişi Nowheristanlı olmak için bize başvurdu.

Ne tür kişiler bunlar?

- Kendilerini belirlenmiş sınırlar ve milletler içinde ifade edemeyen ve hiçbir yere ait hissetmeyen kimseler. ABD Başkanı Bush veya İran Cumhurbaşkanı Ahmedinejad zihniyetine karşı olanlar. Dünyayı bir yerinden değiştirmek isteyenler. Japon, Fransız, İngiliz ya da Amerikalı olmaktan sıkılanlar. Dünyanın her yerinden vatandaşları var şu anda.

DEMOKRASİYE KARŞIYIM

Nasıl bu kadar kişinin haberi oldu?

- İnternette özellikle bloglar aracılığıyla çok kısa sürede yayıldı. BBC ve CNN’de yayınlanan röportajların da etkisi olmuştur. Şu anda web sitesini yeniden yapılandırıyoruz. O zaman vatandaşlık başvuruları daha kolay ve hızlı yapılabilecek.

Vatandaşların Nowheristan kimlik kartı ve pasaportu olacak mı?

- Bu şaka değil, gayet ciddi bir iş. Tabii ki pasaportları olacak. Şu anda onun hazırlığı içindeyiz. Elbette şu anda Nowheristan pasaportuyla ABD’ye girmeye çalışmayacaksınız. Ama bir iki yıl içinde bu da olacak. Size bütün bunların hayali ve garip geldiğini biliyorum ama ben bir eylem adamıyım. Lübnan iç savaşında, 1991-94’te Birleşik Direnişçiler Hareketi örgütünün lideriydim. Bu nedenle siyasi sığınmacı olarak üç yıl kadar Fransa ve Küba’da kalmak zorunda kalmıştım.

Peki bu ülkenin başkanı siz misiniz?

- İmparatoruyum. Ama elbette bu sembolik. Karar mercii olmayacağım. Saçmalayacağım, komik olacağım. Hatta başladım bile. Fotoğraflarıma bakarsanız Salvador Dali tarzı sürrealist bir imparator göreceksiniz. Kocaman bir kaftan ve asayla dolaşıyorum. Siyah büyük bir otomobil beni her yere götürüyor, şoförüm kapımı açıyor, çevremdeki herkes bana “majesteleri” diye hitap ediyor.

Ülkeyi kim yönetecek?

- Hepsi kendi alanında uzman ve aydınlardan oluşan 600 kişilik bir senato olacak. Filozoflar, doktorlar, mühendisler, ekonomistler, bilimadamları ve sanatçılar verecek kararları. Demokrasiye karşıyım, halklara faydadan çok zarar getirir. Bush’u ve Ahmedinejad’ı yönetime getiren demokrasi. Toplum hakkında en iyi kararı kendileri değil aydınlar verir. Bir aydınla bir aptalın oyunun eşit sayıldığı bir sistem benim ülkemde olamaz.

Aynı zamanda iyi para kazanan ciddi bir iş adamısınız. Nowheristan İmparatoru olarak etrafta dolaşmanız işlerinizi etkilemiyor mu?

- Artık sadece son kararları veriyorum. Sıkıcı iş toplantılarına katılmıyorum, benim yerime bu işi yapacak arkadaşlarım var. Çalışanlarım da beni olduğum gibi kabul etti.

Aileniz ve arkadaşlarınızın tavrı ne? Delirdiğinizi düşünen var mı?

- Benimle nasıl yaşanacağını zamanla öğrendiler. Hiçbir şeye şaşırmıyorlar, benden gelecek her şeye hazırlıklılar. Ama Nowheristan projesini çok ciddiye alıyorlar ve destekliyorlar.

Karınız ve iki oğlunuz da Nowheristan vatandaşı mı?

- Karım eski bir Rus ritmik cimnastikçi. İki kez dünya şampiyonu olmuş. Ama şimdi grafik tasarımı yapıyor. Fransa’da tanışmıştık. Tam bir Rus. Anlayacağınız ülkemin imparatoruyum ama karımı Nowheristanlı olmaya ikna edemedim. Bir keresinde “Bütün ülkeler boktandır” demiştim. Çok sinirlendi, “Rusya boktan değildir” dedi. O günden beri Nowheristan hakkında söylediklerimi dinlemiyor. Bu da beni güldürüyor.

Michel Eleftariedes’in gece kulübü Music Hall geçen yıla kadar tüm dünyadan turistlerle dolup taşıyordu. Şimdi sadece Lübnanlılar var.

Mesleğiniz nedir tam olarak?

- Birçok şeyi aynı anda yapıyorum. Besteciyim, prodüktörüm ve Beyrut’un en büyük gece kulübü Music Hall’un sahibiyim. 800 kişi kapasitesi var.

Music Hall nasıl bir yer? Kimler gelip gidiyor?

- Beyrut’a gelen hiçbir turist buraya uğramadan evine dönmez. Büyükelçiler gelir, Beyrut’a uğrayan işadamları gelir. Örneğin Cem Boyner iki-üç kere gelmiştir. Genelde hep canlı müzik var. Önce Kübalı bir grup çıkar, ardından İspanya’dan gelen bir Çingene grup. Şovlar sabah 4’e kadar devam ediyor. İsteyen alkol de içer.

Hizbullah ne diyor bu işe?

- Hizbullah ’ı severim, Hizbullah da beni. Ama bir gün Lübnan’ı bir İslam cumhuriyetine çevirmeye çalışırlarsa problem yaşayabiliriz. Kulübüm Hizbullah karargahına 4-5 dakikalık yürüyüş mesafesinde. İçki sattığımı, ateist olduğumu biliyorlar. Birçok çalışanım zaten örgütün üyesi. Yanlış bir izlenim var, Hizbullah, El Kaide değildir. Yobaz ya da terörist değiller, sadece Batı’ya boyun eğmiyorlar. Ortadoğu’nun parçası olmaktan gurur duyduğu ve İsrail’e hayır diyebildiği için Hizbullah lideri Nasrallah’a saygım büyük.

Geçen yaz İsrail’in Beyrut’u bombalaması sırasında neler oldu? Kapattınız herhalde kulübü.

- Temmuz başında kapattım, iki ay kapalı kaldı. Ama asıl sorun bizimle çalışan yabancı gruplardı; 50 kişiyi sağ salim ülkeden çıkarayım derken mahvoldum. Bomba sesleri yüzünden sinir krizi geçiren müzisyenlerim oldu. Önce Halep’e götürdüm onları, oradan Ürdün’e kaçtık. Savaş bitince hemen döndük ve kulübü tekrar açtık.

Şu anda nasıl gece hayatı Beyrut’ta? Savaş etkiledi mi?

- Bu şiddette savaş dünyanın başka herhangi bir kentinde olsaydı hayat uzun süre normale dönmezdi. Ama Beyrut’ta bombardıman bitti, hayat devam etti. Çünkü bizler savaşla yaşamaya alıştık ne yazık ki. Şu anda gece hayatı cıvıl cıvıl. Tek sorun turist olmaması.

Hürriyet (Turkish “Liberty”) is an influential, high-circulation Turkish newspaper. Hürriyet was founded by Sedat Simavi on 1 May 1948 and sold 50,000 copies in its first week. It also has European and North American editions. Its online edition includes a small English edition.


Nowheristan in Daily News Egypt

January 22, 2009

Could Nowheristan become Everywheristan?

By Deena Douara
First Published: February 18, 2007

http://www.dailystaregypt.com/article.aspx?ArticleID=5672

CAIRO: Michel Elefteriades is a busy man. “I am a clown, a philosopher, a warrior and an artist.” This, besides being the self-proclaimed emperor of a “supernation,” he hopes will take over the world. Literally..

“Nowheristan” is his imagined utopian empire, complete with constitution, embassies, a political structure and citizens with passports. The idea is to create a place free of violence, history, and borders. “The idea of nationality is stupid now. It was good when all [members of a nation] were the same with regards to culture, beliefs, etc.”

Michel Elefteriades (aka Emperor Michel I) is Lebanese of Greek descent, and speaks six languages.

Instead, citizens would all share common ancestors: Phoenicians, Pharaohs, Celts, Native Indians, and Greeks. “The root of all problems is identity.” Their history would be “the sum of all histories of the world.”

Similarly, the political system, if it can be called such, would take the best elements from all systems, including capitalism, socialism, and communism.

The only thing missing then is a geographical location. This is not a concern for Elefteriades though, who believes that within 10 years governments will start falling to Nowheristan.

“If just two percent of every nation is a citizen of Nowheristan, I will have the largest nation in the world.”

Citizens and believers would act as lobby groups within their countries trying to enact the decisions agreed on by Nowheristan on issues like euthanasia, cloning, global warming, and wealth partitioning, among other hot topics.

At the same time, the empire can strategically plan and organize shows of civil disobedience, such as refusing to pay taxes or abstaining from work, which Elefteriades believes could topple governments. Violence, however, would never be used. Indeed, no weapons are allowed in Nowheristan, except by small police/military outfits ensuring some measure of security.

Though he admits some elements of the project are symbolic, or “to create media buzz,” Elefteriades is serious about the project, comparing himself to Karl Marx, who in 25 years spread communism. “It is not as crazy a project as Marx’s… The majority of people will go for the Nowheristan concept. I’m sure of it.”

Already Elefteriades claims more than 9,000 people have expressed interest in joining, from Norway to Saudi Arabia, Egypt to Japan, and many from Turkey. Among his roughly 200 “intellectual” cooperators on the project, Elefteriades says he has some high-level representatives, but who would be “afraid of showing their interest in this point.”

Elefteriades abhors modern politics and politicians. He believes the US, neoconservatives, and their allies are mainly to blame for “creating monsters,” mass frustration, and false dichotomous choices: capitalism vs. communism, freedom vs. the axis of evil, and in 10 years perhaps, America vs. China.

Instead, the decision-makers in Nowheristan would be the crème de la crème of society, citizens over the age of 60, who have proved successful in their diverse fields. Intelligence and morality are the key factors for inclusion. Still, no clerics would be included, unless they excelled in another field, and no quotas would be set.

Elefteriades and his team would select the 600 (unpaid) members of one Senate, and they would in turn select the 600 members of the other Senate. Elefteriades emphasizes that there would be no voting, elections, or “media-ization” of Senators. “Political position is a reward for how much you can lie.”

Each group of Senators would reside in fully-equipped villages at diametrically opposing points on the earth, and re-locating every four years, to avoid “centralism.” He admits he has not approached anyone yet about being a Senator, “because at this point they would tell me to f— off.”

While Elefteriades was once a communist, he no longer believes a cook’s vote should equal a scientist’s or expert’s. Now he believes more in eclecticism, or “brainocracy.” “I believe people are equal in rights but not in obligations.”

Responding to a comparison between his utopia and dictatorships, Elefteriades says “[The Senate] can throw me in jail if they want …full power is with the senators,” who make all the decisions relevant to the empire.

The idea of Nowheristan came about at a crossroads. “I had to start something like this or I would have started fighting again,” like an “atheist bin Laden.”

Perhaps this is one reason Elefteriades admires Hezbollah’s Hassan Nasrallah, even though he is a-religious. “He’s smart, he’s not lying to his people, he believes in what he’s doing and he’s not gratuitous.” He does not blame Hezbollah for the war that ravaged his country most recently. “If you place an implant in the body [Israel] and it rejects that implant, the body will die.”

Though much has been made of the presence of the UN secretary-general representative and the Lebanese Minister of Culture at a performance at the National Orchestra of Nowheristan upon its launch, Elefteriades admits they were there under a deliberate misunderstanding, thinking the event was merely a philanthropic event of multiculturalism. They learned the true significance of the ceremony when Elefteriades illuminated them with a “delirious expose” of the project. “I manipulated them, but so what? We have been manipulated for a long time.”

In order to be taken seriously, Elefteriades, dressed in an eclectic costume of baggy black pants, silver bracelets, and cane, has spent years making lots of money. “Money had no meaning for me until I was 25. Then I realized that to be taken seriously, you have to prove to people that you can make money. Money measures the importance of someone.”

He has opened clubs, music halls, and a restaurant, as well as produced fusion music for notable musicians such as Jose Galvez and Toni Hanna.

His roots were always activist though. Elefteriades recalls how since elementary school he was always in trouble with his peers. “If someone mistreated a girl or someone weaker on the playground, I could not interfere.” This continued until he was 15, when he became a war activist. He claims he was arrested and tortured by Christian militias for having communist ideas, which he adopted on his own after reading Marx’s Das Kapital.

After joining his hero Michel Aoun’s army at 17, he was given the choice by Syrian forces, he says, to surrender or flee. He chose to become a political exile in France.

After similarly causing disturbances in France, and being “more left than communism,” Elefteriades fled to Cuba, the only existing communist nation he believed would be a haven for someone like him.

In his one year in Cuba, he even began to criticize Fidel Castro and decided to leave once again. By then, Syria was out of Lebanon and Elefteriades could return to his Lebanese homeland, where he says he escaped two assassination attempts after organizing resistance movements.

Eventually he reached a point where he thought it was all futile. “I can’t get anywhere with this,” he felt.

His time in Cuba though inspired his idea for cultural fusion, a path he has been on ever since, combining songs, beats, and instruments of Arabs, Balkans, Cuban, Lebanese, Palestinian, the Swiss and gypsies. “I thought culture can make the world a better place.”

In his Cuban Beirut club, Amour y Libertad, replete with Cuban waiters, barmen, and cigar-rollers, the theme is anti-Americanism and walls are decorated with quotes from Che Guevara and Fidel Castro, while flyers on the injustice of the American embargo are distributed.

When he’s not creating an empire, running his businesses, penning a novel, composing music, or stirring trouble, Elefteriades judges contestants for the pan-Arab talent show “X-Factor.” He is currently in Cairo to view talents whom he will judge on the show for his second year.

While contestants compete from across all Arab countries, Elefteriades says the Maghreb region and Middle East countries produce more talent than the Gulf states due to a long tradition of children singing and dancing at home, and because of a longer tradition of music historically.

Recruits are garnered, for both show and empire, through Elefteriades’ “secret weapons,” media and Internet. “No [country] will escape.”

Daily News Egypt is an Egyptian daily newspaper established in 2005 and is affiliated with the International Herald Tribune. The paper carries business, political and cultural news and analysis as well as local Arab content originating from the Daily Star (Lebanon).


HIH Michel I of Nowheristan in Spiegel Online- Part 2-

January 22, 2009

Der Kaiser von Nirgendwo
Von Ulrike Putz, Beirut

2. Teil: Tabula Rasa. Michel I. will mit einem neuen Land anfangen

Es dauerte nicht lange, dann war dem hyperaktiven Tausendsassa das Geldscheffeln nicht mehr genug. Religiöser Fanatismus, Politiker, die nach Feudalherrenart regieren, Korruption und Vetternwirtschaft: Die scheinbar endlose Staatskrise seines Heimatlands ließen ihn zum politischen Aktivisten werden – und fast verzweifeln. “Im Libanon etwas verändern zu wollen, heißt, sich zum Sisyphus zu machen”, sagt Elefteriades an diesem Abend im Hinterzimmer seiner “Music Hall”. “Deshalb habe ich mich also entschlossen, Tabula Rasa zu machen und mit einem neuen Land neu anzufangen.”

Es ist ihm wichtig zu sagen, dass dieser Akt nicht aus einer Laune heraus geschah, sondern das Ergebnis komplexer philosophischer Überlegungen war: Dazu nimmt er seine Besucher mit auf einen Parforceritt durch die antike wie die jüngere Geistesgeschichte. Indische Denker, “Das Kapital”, Jesus, das alte Rom, der Unabhängigkeitskampf der Tschetschenen, Kant, Hegel, Chomsky. Er hat sie alle studiert, und das Ergebnis ist sein Staatsprojekt. “Nowheristan – wir haben die Lösung”, heißt es im Internet, wo das Land derzeit noch zu Hause ist.

Nur arbeitslose Politiker sind gute Politiker

Während Elefteriades erzählt, klingt im Hintergrund Latino-Musik, die immer mal wieder abbricht. Der Club ist heute geschlossen, die engagierten Bands proben auf der Bühne neben seinem Büro neue Stücke ein. Ab und an schaut ein Kellner herein und bringt frischen Espresso und eine neue Flasche Mineralwasser für “seine Hoheit”. Der Kaiser trinkt nicht, raucht nicht, und auch Drogen sollen bei seinen Kreativschüben nicht im Spiel sein. “Ich bin von Natur aus high”, sagt der Mann mit der geschniegelten Bohemian-Frisur und dem adrett gestutzten Bärtchen.

Guter Laune ist er heute nicht: Wenige Stunden zuvor hat einer der täglichen Stromausfälle in Beirut die Festplatte eines Computers seiner Musikproduktionsfirma zerstört. Vier komplett durchproduzierte Alben sind für immer verloren – und die Techniker, die es versäumt hatten, Sicherheitskopien anzulegen, seitdem arbeitslos. Ein Kaiser muss auch mal streng sein können, auch wenn Elefteriades versucht, sich Verständnis für seine Angestellten abzuringen. “Wir stammen alle aus derselben Generation, anstatt zur Schule zu gehen, haben wir monatelang im Keller gehockt, während draußen die Bomben fielen.” Wer in so chaotischen Zuständen aufwachse, der würde auch später nicht vorausplanen können. Trotzdem mussten die Unglücksraben gehen: “Der heutige Tag hat mich drei bis vier Millionen Dollar gekostet”, sagt Elefteriades müde.

Irgendwann soll aus dem “Nirgendwo-Land” das “Überall-Land” werden, das ist das erklärte Ziel Michel des Ersten. Dann soll der Kaiser abdanken und ein Ältestenrat der Klügsten die Welt weise und gerecht lenken. “Demokratie ist ein schlechtes System, weil es diejenigen nach oben bringt, die den Menschen die besten Märchen erzählten”, sagt Elefteriades. “Was die Welt heute braucht, sind mehr arbeitslose Politiker.” Herkunft, Ethnie und Religion sollen in Nowheristan nichts gelten, auch deshalb soll “gebrochenes Englisch” die Landessprache werden.

Dass der Herrscher von “Nowheristan” jemals die Geburtsstunde seines Landes erleben wird, darf als unwahrscheinlich gelten. Man muss das Gedankengebäude, das Elefteriades unter diesem Namen entwickelt hat, als Auswuchs des tiefen Frusts verstehen, dem die junge, erfolgreiche Elite im Libanon konstant ausgesetzt ist. Treffen sich zwei Libanesen, dann wird sehr schnell der Nachname und das Heimatdorf der Großeltern abgefragt: Jeder Libanese versteht es, seinen Gegenüber anhand dieser Daten sofort in ein kompliziertes System religiöser und sozialer Schubladen einzusortieren.

In einem Land, indem so die gesamte Existenz davon geprägt wird, in welche Schicht man hinein geboren wird, ist die Idee, sich seine Identität als Bürger von Nowheristan selbst zusammensuchen zu dürfen, sehr verlockend: 52.022 Menschen haben sich inzwischen als Nowheristanis registrieren lassen, vermeldet die offizielle Webseite des Fiktiv-Landes. Viele sind Libanesen. “Die Libanesen haben es satt, dass sich alle Welt in unsere Angelegenheiten einmischt”, sagt der “Kaiser”. So lange er seinen Plan, “die Welt zu retten”, nicht in die Tat umsetzen konnte, unterstützt er deshalb die pro-syrische libanesische Opposition, genauer gesagt seinen ehemaligen Befehlshaber General Aoun. “Natürlich wollen die Syrer Einfluss nehmen. Aber besser die Syrer, die wenigstens Araber sind und unsere Sprache sprechen, als die Amerikaner, die versuchen, den Libanon unter ihren Einfluss zu stellen.” Er glaubt, dass es bald wieder zu einem Bürgerkrieg im Libanon kommen wird. “Wir versuchen, die Spielregeln zu ändern, aber solange auch nur ein Mensch bewaffnet ist, hat Pazifismus keine Chance.”

Dass viele seiner Landsleute in Elefteriades bloß einen reichen Exzentriker sehen, der sich gern produziert, lässt den Geschäftsmann kalt. “Natürlich ist die Kaiser-Nummer ein Gag”, sagt er. Ein Gag, der ihn nach eigenen Aussagen bislang eine halbe Million Dollar gekostet hat. Dank des “sexy Marketing-Pakets”, das sein Team geschnürt hat, ist Elefteriades inzwischen Stammgast verschiedener libanesischer Talkshows.

Ob er dort bloß Wahlkampf für seinen ehemaligen Befehlshaber Michel Aoun treibt oder aber tatsächlich für eine bessere Welt kämpft, liegt im Auge des Betrachters. Er selbst sagt, diese Auftritte seinen notwendig, um “sein gutes Gift versprühen” zu können. “Ich habe ein sehr bescheidenes Projekt: die Welt zu retten”, sagt Kaiser Michel der Erste. “Dafür muss man es auch ertragen, im Rampenlicht zu stehen.”

Er meint das wirklich ernst.

Spiegel Online is the online version of Der Spiegel.
Der Spiegel (German for “The Mirror”) is a German weekly magazine, published in Hamburg. It is Europe’s largest weekly magazine with a circulation of more than one million per week. It is known in Germany for its distinctive, academic writing style and its large volume—a standard issue may run 200 pages or more.


HIH Michel I of Nowheristan in Speigel Online- Part 1-

January 22, 2009

Der Kaiser von Nirgendwo

Von Ulrike Putz, Beirut

http://www.spiegel.de/politik/ausland/0,1518,537663,00.html

Im libanesischen Bürgerkrieg war er als grausamer Kämpfer gefürchtet, dann machte er als Musikproduzent Millionen. Doch Michel Elefteriades will mehr, nämlich die Welt retten – mit seinem eigenen Kaiserreich. Bisher haben sich 52.022 Untertanen freiwillig gemeldet.

Des Kaisers Kleider sind nicht nach der neuesten Mode geschneidert, im Gegenteil. Der reich bestickte Kaftan, den seine Hoheit Michel I. trägt, scheint aus der Zeit zu stammen, als Nahostpolitik noch von den Sultanen in Konstantinopel bestimmt wurde. Das Cape, das er über dem Kaftan trägt, könnte von Graf Dracula persönlich stammen. Und auch der Spazierstock, mit dem der 37-Jährige spielt, würde besser in einen Palast als in das Hinterzimmer eines Nachtclubs passen: Der silbern beschlagene Bambusstab ist das Geschenk des Sultans von Oman an einen Mann, der sich selbst zum Kaiser gekrönt hat: von “Nowheristan”, dem “Nirgendwoland”.

Mit bürgerlichem Namen heißt der Mann, den seine Anhänger mit “Hoheit” ansprechen, Michel Elefteriades. Er ist Libanese und Weltbürger, viel gespielter Komponist, Musikproduzent und Nachtclubbesitzer, Philosoph und Herrscher über das von ihm gegründete Phantasieland. Wobei es Elefteriades erklärtes Ziel ist, sich wieder arbeitslos zu machen. Denn laut der Verfassung Nowheristans muss der Kaiser abdanken, sobald aus seiner Fiktion Wirklichkeit geworden ist. Dann übernimmt eine Priesterkaste des Guten die Herrschaft über eine freie Welt, in der Demokratie Schnee von gestern ist.

Die Biografie: vom Bürgerkrieger zum Musikproduzenten

Doch der Reihe nach: Dass frustrierte Bürger versuchen, aus dem Staatsgefüge auszuscheren und nach eigenen Regeln ihr eigenes kleines Reich zu gründen, ist an sich nichts Neues. Seien es Hippie-Kommunen in den USA oder Fürstentümer auf Nordsee-Plattformen. Der Drang nach der totalen Selbstbestimmung lässt immer mal wieder Kleinststaaten entstehen, die ein Weile für Medienwirbel sorgen und dann in Vergessenheit geraten. Genau das will Elefteriades vermeiden: Sein Projekt soll mehr sein als nur ein Wolkenkuckucksheim.

Der Grund dafür mag in seiner Biographie zu suchen sein. Elefteriades hat den Kampf für eine Welt nach seiner Vorstellung tatsächlich mit der Waffe in der Hand geführt. Als Teenager kämpfte er im libanesischen Bürgerkrieg für seine Ideale, als Kommandant einer christlichen Miliz, die General Michel Aoun nahe stand. Es war eine Zeit der Folter, des Todes und des Elends. “Ich war dafür berüchtigt, sehr grausam zu sein”, räumt er heute ohne Umschweife ein.

Dass er ansonsten vage bleibt, wenn es um seine Vergangenheit als Kämpfer geht, ist typisch libanesisch. Fast alle in seiner Altersgruppe waren in irgendeiner Form am Bürgerkrieg beteiligt, in dem eigentlich jede Kriegspartei irgendwie Dreck am Stecken hatte. Viele Männer und auch einige Frauen um die 35 dürften getötet und vielleicht auch gefoltert haben – besser, man spricht nicht darüber.

Nach der Niederlage Aouns gründete Elefteriades, der nicht aufgeben wollte, eine geheime Widerstandsgruppe, die noch eine Weile weiter kämpfte. Zwei Mal entging er selbst einem Attentat, dann verließ er das Land. Es folgten Jahre im kubanischen und serbischen Exil, erst 1997 kehrte er in den Libanon zurück. Elefteriades hatte aus dem Ausland etwas mitgebracht, was ihn zum Millionär machen sollte: Musik. Seine Firma “Elef” ist heute das größte Weltmusik-Label im Nahen Osten. In seinem Beiruter Nachtclub “Music Hall” feiern an den Wochenenden Tausende gut betuchter Araber rauschende Feste zu Live-Musik aus allen Winkeln der Welt.

Spiegel Online is the online version of Der Spiegel.
Der Spiegel (German for “The Mirror”) is a German weekly magazine, published in Hamburg. It is Europe’s largest weekly magazine with a circulation of more than one million per week. It is known in Germany for its distinctive, academic writing style and its large volume—a standard issue may run 200 pages or more.


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